Norco College invites you to apply to the NASA California Space Grant Consortium Program. This program is a collaboration between NASA, the University of California, San Diego, and California Community Colleges. Twelve Community Colleges have been selected to participate. The purpose of the program is to enhance the STEM preparation at California Community Colleges resulting in increased graduation rates and greater campus enrollments in STEM disciplines and to improve a bridge opportunity for a maximum of 12 students per campus to a STEM major at a four-year university. The vision is to develop a program for California Community Colleges to expand and retain students interested in STEM. Teams will use micro‐computers (Arduinos) to teach hardware, programming, robotics, logic, and teamwork. The grant partners with NASA and industry to provide monthly webinars and site tours.
- Faculty Training (New Faculty)
- Student Training
- Student Team Projects
- NASA Webinars (Monthly)
Norco College's Jessiah Ruiz, Assistant Professor of Computer Science is the faculty
mentor who will lead our student team. Ten students from our campus will be selected
to participate on the Norco College Space Grant team. This is an exciting opportunity
for you to develop your skills, discover your interests, collaborate with like-minded
students in a team environment, receive mentorship from STEM professionals and learn
how to navigate NASA internships. These projects will be centered around the use of
low-cost programmable microcomputers to collect, store, and transmit in-field sensor
and GPS locator data, as well as drive a controller. For Spring/Summer 2024, the broad
focus of these projects is either (1) Artemis (2) Earth Science OR (3) Deep Space.
Possible example projects include (a) using robots to capture atmospheric motion and
composition; land use and vegetation; ocean currents, temperatures, and upper-ocean
life; and ice on land and sea (b) developing autonomous robots to map the lunar based
upon landmarks instead of GPS, (c) developing autonomous lunar landers to fly into
craters, collect soil and water samples, and return to base camp, or (d) developing
autonomous robots to drop in lunar lava tubes, explore, and mine minerals.
The specific project will be selected by the students and the faculty mentor. These
students will be taught micro-computer construction and programming skills as well
as the needed STEM project knowledge by their community college faculty mentor. For
those with little or no experience with Arduinos, optional self-paced web courses
are available to teach students all the hardware assembly and programming skills.
Eligibility Requirements:
* U.S. Citizenship
* 18 years of age
* Registered and enrolled at Norco College for Spring 2024 (Norco College is your home campus)
* STEM Major (Science, Technology, Engineering, Math) or Interest in becoming a STEM Major
* Concurrent enrollment or completion of 9+ units of STEM coursework
* Able to commit to the April 2024 to August 2024 online and in-person project, in-person assembly, team sessions and NASA webinars
* Must have internet access
* Upload an unofficial transcript that provides the following: your name, your school’s name, current enrollment
The project timeline is from March 2024 - August 2024 and provides each student participant
with a $650 stipend award at the culmination of the program. Only students who are
U.S. citizens will be able to receive these stipend awards. Students who are non-U.S.
citizens may participate in the program but will not be eligible for the award. If
the student drops out of the program before completion, the student will not receive
the stipend.
The deadline to apply has been extended to Sunday, March 31, 2024 at 11:59 pm. Accepted students will be notified on April 1, 2024 via email. I highly encourage you to apply to this opportunity and add this NASA
experience to your future STEM career! If you have any questions, please reach out
to Jessiah Ruiz or Patricia Gill.